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Somalia

A circus of pain and relief - kala azar in Somalia

Henrik Glette/MSF
A mother shows her son's scars after he was treated with traditional methods for kala azar. He is now undergoing treatment at the kala azar ward of MSF Health Centre in Huddur.
Project Update - 8 May 2007
 
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Humanitarian challenges

MSF expresses dismay at the decision announced by the Dutch Government to appeal Geneva Court ruling

MSF denounces, in the strongest possible terms, the relentless attitude of the Dutch government in its pursuit of legal action against MSF and its persistent denial of the role it played in freeing Arjan Erkel. Press Release - 4 May 2007
 
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Moldova

Treating HIV/AIDS in Moldova's breakaway region of Transnistria

The prevalence of HIV in Transnistria is four times higher than in Moldova, according to official statistics. Project Update - 4 May 2007
 
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Ethiopia

Deadly kala azar is still forgotten

"We are extremely happy about the Ethiopian government's fast reaction on HIV/AIDS," said Ivan Zenar, Project Coordinator for MSF's Humera project. "But we remain concerned that kala azar is still so completely neglected, despite the fact that is a deadly disease." Press Release - 30 Apr 2007
 
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Sierra Leone

Malaria and infections

It is sometimes hard to know how things start. Take Mariana Mohammed, for example. Seven days ago, she was admitted to the MSF referral centre in Gondama. Her parents arrived in the late afternoon, after a day of travel that started early in the morning. Project Update - 30 Apr 2007
 
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Malaria

Malaria portrait from Sierra Leone

Salaymatu Kargbo was one of the first people we met in Yamandu. A baby girl, just 17 months old, with tiny braids in her hair and sleepiness in her eyes. Her mother carefully approached our car, as soon as it stopped outside the colourful clinic. Project Update - 27 Apr 2007
 
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Uganda

Malaria: living with a killer

"During the dry season we don't see so much malaria, but in the rainy season I can see up to 50 cases a day. Now the rainy season is starting here so I'm sure I will see many people with malaria."
Robert Aniku (25) MSF Clinical Officer, Uganda
Project Update - 25 Apr 2007
 
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Burundi

More about malaria in Burundi

"In general, the implementation of ACT's is quite good in Burundi. ACT's are the official first-line treatment for malaria, and they are widely available," says Ria Temmerman, MSF Medical Coordinator in Burundi. But Burundi remains an exception, as most of the countries where malaria is endemic are only slowly providing ACT. Project Update - 25 Apr 2007
 
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Burundi

A severe malaria case in Burundi

"I was scared for my son. When we arrived at the hospital, he was very weak and he couldn't talk," explains the mother of a three and an half year old boy with severe malaria. Project Update - 25 Apr 2007
 
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Child mortality - Malaria photo series from Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone has one of the world's highest child mortality rates (282 out of every 1,000 children die before their fifth birthday) and much of this is due to malaria. In the hospital and five clinics in the Bo area where MSF works, two out of five consultations are related to malaria. Project Update - 25 Apr 2007
Cholera intervention in South Kivu
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)

Independent medical humanitarian assistance

We provide medical assistance to people affected by conflict, epidemics, disasters, or exclusion from healthcare. Our teams are made up of tens of thousands of health professionals, logistic and administrative staff - most of them hired locally. Our actions are guided by medical ethics and the principles of independence and impartiality. We are a non-profit, self-governed, member-based organisation.

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